ort oNp a aay 


LMANAC, 


FOR  THAYEAR OF OUR LORD 












<< 
V7 





STSTSON. 


‘ 


<2 













"THE WIRD AFTER BRSSEXTILE, 


[7 “AND UNTIL THE 
OUR T ‘ee D EF’ JULY, 


ist Wear of the Independence 





- 
. 


@ 


Las 
oes 


OF THE Te, Se STATES. 
a 


$5 es 


4 
fo 


CNONG) 


A 
re 


ISIE 


\ 
2 


Calculated for the Horizon and Meridian of New Jersey, 
IN EQUAL OR CLOCK TIME. 





ay ve ¥ - 
> BY DAVID YOUNG, PHILOM. ~ 





TE LEETLEALLATEELEREAE 


Pe: ‘PERTH AMBOY, N. J., 
BF PUBLISHED AND SOLD WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BY © 


{JAMES ALLEN. 





Woyes merry < ey Me 





ti fons MAY 19 1954 aia 


>a. : 








& 


part of the body it governs. 


¢ (Aries,) a Ram. 
(Taurus,) a Bull. 
(Gemini, ) Twins. 
(Cancer,) a Crab Fish. 
(Leo,) a Lion. 
(Virgo,) a Virgin. 


obi «x 


1 


4 


CHRONOLOGICAL CYCLES. 


s¢ Feet. wif i 
oo know where the Sign is) find the dap of the sient and 


a against the day in the 4th column, you have the sign or place of @ 
the Moon: then find the sign here, and it ig give oH what 


Names and Characters of the id» of the Zodiac 





PRINCIPAL ARTICLES. 





$DOSOODY POQODOS 


THE ANATOMY OF MAN’S BODY; - 
AS GOVERNED BY THE TWELVE CONSTELL&FIONS, 


~ Head and ae 





2g, 
co 
s 


Ea ee 





oo 


SS 


xf (Bibre) ; Balance. 
m (Scorpio a Scorpion. 
t (Sagittarius, jan Archer. 
vs (Capricornus,) a Gout. 
or (Aquarius,) a Butler 
x ( Pisce) Fish, 


a site 







MOVEABLE FEAS' 










Dominica) Letter C. { Easter Sunday, April. 

Golden Number, 5 | Rogation Sunday, May 

Epact, 14 | Ascension, May 

Solar Cycle, : Whit-Sunday, May | 

Roman Indiction, Trinity, May 30 — 

Julian Period, 6560 Advent, Nov. 287 — 
EPOOCOSCCLOSOSOS of 

HT Ge vant | aap 





be ie 


ERI SOODOGO OOS DER 


@ Characters and Names of the Aspects, with the Angles wiich 








§) they include. th 
Aspects. Deg. Aspects. Deg 
§ 6 Conjunction | * Sextile (obsolete.) cog) 
W 8 Opposition bio Nodes. 
) 4 Trine (obsolete.) (120 | Q Ascending ‘ a Q- 
O Quartile . 90 | es Descending § “‘°°% 
$) Characters and Nunes of the Planets, with their Be ie 
Mean Distances from the Sun, und the times ) 
) of their respective Revolutions. | 
Character& Names. Diameters in miles. Mean dis. from Revolutjog rouad 
the sun in miles. ine a pC p 
Q © . 892,163 ! 
& 5 ye 2,999), 86,841,327 F “a ) 
9 7,660 68,841,768 a 700787 
Q ae) 7,964 05,47 3,127 365.2563884 é) 
4 4,118 145,014,532 686.979646 | 
§ ut Jupiter 92,572 495,164,461  4,332.585117 
%® Saturn 75,304 907,824,568  10.758,322161 
( ni Herschel . 34,585, 15825,735,)23 30,688.712687 ¢ : 
@ The Moon. 2,174 Sameasearth. Same as earth. 
Nore.—With egi ard ‘ bulk, the Sun is equal to 1,405,851 of the’? 
Gi Non Tupiter, to 5510's Saturn, to 845; and Herschel, to nearly 82, 


gThe Earth is equal to 19 et Mercury, to 7 of Mars, or to 49 of the Moon. 
oO" times the bulk of Venus is equal to eight times that of the Earth. () 





CUSTOMARY NOTES. 
1. Venus ( 2) will bean Even’g Star until October 8rd. 
Brien Morning Star until July 22d. 1848. 

2. The Mono will run highest, this year, about the 27th 
degree of (mr) Gemini, and lowest about the 27d degree of} 
A(t ) Sagittarius. 

"3, Latitude of Herschel (xi) about 39’ 80 south, this year.€) 
4. Longitude of the Moon’s Ascending Node (8) in the 
middle of this. year, 6 signs, 14 degrees. & 
5. Mean obliquity of the Ecliptic i in the middle of this year 
23° 27" Va 1.” True atta iy 2 same time, 23° 27’ 23.6”. 8 


Q EQUINOXES AND SOLSTICHS. D.u.M. 
) _ Vernal Equinox March 21 0 37 Morn. 
a - Summer Solstice June. 21 .9 23, Even. 
Autumnal Equinox ' September 23 11 26 Morn, 
Q- Winter Solstice December 22 5 9 Morn. 






time of the Sun’ setting , and from the sum subtract the time 


bof risin hot 
eSoooconc. OPPO 





_ Rule to find tl the len rth of the day.—Add 12 honrs to ie) 
HB 
$s 


~ 





Pe 


cn 


ECLIPSES. | 


000 








There will be two Eclipses of the Sun, and two of the Moon, 


this year. * 
ov 


I.—There will he an Eclipse of the Moon on Wednesday, 
March 31, at 4h. 21m. in the afternoon, invisible in America. 
Visible in the Eqstern Hemisphere. ; 


I{.—-There will be an Eclipse of the Sun on Thursday, April 
15, at, lh, 26m. in the morning, invisible in America. Its chief 
visibilijgy will be in the Indian Ocean, and the adjacent regions of 
the Sotttiern Ocean, extending to 86° of SoutHMatitude. It will 
be visibl@ (wholly or in part) at the Cape of Good Hope, Mada- 










jesser neighboring islands. It will be centraMand tor 
ridian, in long. 89° 58’ east from Greenwich and laf’24° 30’ south. 


tiI.—There will be an Helbipse of the Moduler Friday, Sep- 
tember 24, at. 9h. 29m. in \, eee invisible here. ‘The be- 
ginning of the Eclipse may be seen at Califo 
in Asia the whole will be visible. . 


' 1V.—There will be an Eclipse of the Sun#n Saturday, Octo- 
ber 9, at 4b. 1tm. in the morning, invigible ir merica, except the 
north-eastern coast of Greenland. It will be visible in Europe, the 
greater part of Asia, and the northern’part of Africa — It will be 
central and annular on the meridian, in long. 47° tl’ east from 
Greenwich, and lat. 31° 22 north. It will be annular in the south 
parts of Great Britain and Ireland, and in the northof Franee. The 
centre will pass very little south of Cape Clear in Ireland, about 
15 miles south of Exeter, in England, and about the like distance 
north of Havre, in {*rance; while the annular phase of the Eclipse 
will extend more than 100 miles on each side of the path of the 
centre. lhus it will be annular at Limerick, Wexford, Waterford, 
Cork and Kinsale, in Ireland; at Cardiganaud Swansea, in South 
Wales ; at Bristol, Greenwich, Dover, Portsmouth, Plymouth and 
other towns in the south part of England ; and at Calais, Boulogne, 
Havre, Honfleur, Caevand Cherbourg, on the neighboring coast 
of France. Magnitude at Edinburg, 9.95 digits on the Sun’s sou- 
thern limb; at Brest, 10.87 digits on the northern limb. 4 


c— RF ALOE PS 2 





and Oregon, and 















Anecpore,—‘‘ Well Pat, my good fellow,” said-a victorious General toa 
brave son of Evin after a bloody battle, “and what did you do to help us 
gain this victory ®’ ‘ Do!” replied Pat, “may it plase yer honor, I went 
up boldly to wun of the enemy and cut off his fut/” “ Cut off hile: 
and why did you not cut off his head?” **Ah! and faith, that was off a é, 


ready ‘” SE oo 


ry 
Ja 


al 


mh a i 
o Z J , 
Sar?” x J Gg 

’ Y grr 


feo A TABLE 


_ Showing, to the nearest second, what time it ought to ve by aClock 
‘whien the sun’s centre is on the meridian, once in every four days. 
» ; 




















































































f January | February | March April May June 
Dp. H.M.s.| H. MS.| H. M.S.) H..M.S, | WH. M.S. | H. M.S. | p, 
S Lyeve 3 49} 013 53) 012 37} 0 4 Uj) 11 56 58/11 57 261 4 
peo} 0 5.397.014 18{ 911 45) 0 2 48)-4) 56 31,11 58 4; 5 
.. 91 0 7 23) 014 30] 01047); VU 1 39) It 56 14]11 58 48) 9 
134, 0.8 56] 014 30)°0 943] O 0 34/11 56 61/11 59 36) 13 
37) 0.10 23) 01418; 0 8 35] morning. | 11 56 7] eve 0 27) 17 
21] 011 36 | OF 99) 0 7 23} -11) 58.41) 11 5617 |. 0.1 19 | 21 
£95) 0.12 37) 0 13°21) '0 6°10} 11 57 54/11 56 35} 092 11) 25 
291 0 13 25) O, 4 56 bbl 57.15 [1b 57 2 Gees 0/29 

July | Septem. | October | Novem. Decem. 
D.| A. M.S. H. M 8S.j H. M.S.| H. M.S.j| H. M.S. | D. 
1] 0 3°34) 2; morning. | 11 49 45 | 11 43 44/11 49 11] 1 
5} 0 4 B70 5 44) 11 58 39] 11 48 31411 43 45] 11 50 47) 5 
91 0°448; 0 5 17111 57 19) 11 47 23; 11 43 59] 11 52 31 | 9 
13} °0 5 21 | 0 4 40] 11 55 56a 46 2211 44 27411 54 22) 148 
17) 0-5 47) 0 3 55), 11 54 32411 45 30/11 45 8] 11 56 18 | 17 
21} 0° 6 4| @ 3.1411 53 8] 11 44 46] 11 46 2] 11 58 17) 2) 
25) 0.6.11) O 3 59)11-51 54] 11 44 13) 11 47 Dhev 017) 25 
29} 0 6 10 | O00 5h | 11 50 24) 11 43 52111 48 238) 0 2 15123 


—ma@ erm 


ASTRONOMICAL CALCULATION, 


Showing all the visible Eclipses of the Moon at Jerusalem, from Julian Pe- 
ici, 4,710, to J. P. 4,717 inclusive, with the vulgar year of the Christian Era. 


| : ” 
3 
4 
~ 
4 
ol 
~_ 


v* 





4710 | ——4] March 11, visible. 

4711 | ——31 No Eclipse of the Moon this year. 
0 ——2 | None visible 

4713 |} ——=1} January 8, visible and total. 

é ‘ ——1 December 28, partly visible. , 
“A714 A. D.1 | None visible. ’ 








4715 | a.v.2| November 8, visible. 

A716 | a.v.3| May 3, visible and total. 
ATI6 | a. v.3 | October 28, visible and total. 

4717 | a.v.4 | October 16, visible. 





| The first four years are marked with the negative sign, becduse they are 
previous tothe commencement of the vulgar Christian Era. The ealculations 
are made in the New Style. 

oa. 


Wer a 


b 


A Table exhibiting the Dominical Letter for every year in the 19th Drie. 


A.D.O| 1 2/3|4|516|7|8|9 1." DIRECTIONS. 


























Ilo! «| PD, C | BJAG; # | E| DiGB) A | The Dominical letter for 
(181|G|F ED| C| B]AIGF| E\p | C jlany year will be found 
182)B A| G | KF, &\DCi B| A} G| FR) D jagainst the first $ figures 
ey Ci BIAG P| Ki DICB! Alg | F Jof the date and under the 
154'0D) C | B | AGE) E} D | C\pa4| G | 4th or unit figure. There 
So) |) KB |DC| B} Al G|FE| D) © | B are two Dominical letters 
186/AG] F |} EB} DICB! A! G) Figpl o |/for every Bissextile year ; 
187 8 | A ler} &} D| CB Al G, F | & the first serving for Jan. 
28\pc!B!A!GIFE| D|C!B\laq| BF land Feb. and the other 
1389) | DICB)| Aj G| F\/ED/C | B fr | for the remainder of the 
[1901G[F] | DICB) al G|F\DE ¢ jyear. 














Luble showing what Day of the Week any Day of the Months, 























January, October|A'B C DBE G DIRE 
Feb. March, Nov.\D EF Ga BC Seck the ninical Totter 
April,. J aly, GABC Dp KF || forthe gi against the 
May, IB C DERGA given month in this table,and 
Jane, ~ ® fF G A B.C D || the figures Below in that col 
August. 1DER GA B nin, show the 2 ms Oe 
a. 5, ae month answering to each o 
Soutewp tard Deg =" HO A eee Ee the Sundeyes- from the neare_ 
4 2 8 4 5 6 7 || est of which tothe given day, 
S 9 10 41 12 48 14 |) count batkward or forward in 
15 16 17 18 19 2@ 2) || the week, as in the following 
22 23 24 25 26 27 28 || exampl 
29 80 $1 


What day of the week was May 28th, 1808? The Dominical letter 
for that year, after February (it being bissextile) was B, which against 
May stands over the 29th day. Now as the 29th’ was Srey, the 2&th, 
you Know, mast pave been Saturday. 

A TABLE, Divecting what quantitics of ume to add to, or “Tbwaeliios from. 
the time of High water at New-York, (contained in the leet column of the: 
calender pages,) to find the time of High Water atthe places here enumera-} 
ted, [a] denotes adition, [s] gubtreaticnl 
Places’ Names. H.M. Places’ Names, 
a)6 30|Hackensack, 





H.M., Fiaces’ Names. 


al3 0! Polopel’s Island, |ai3 0 


HM. | 

























Albany, 

Amboy, s!Q 45] f¥alifax, a/3 0}|Port Roseway,, | s|0 50 
Annopolis, D.M.|s}2  0/ flartford, a| 2 20) Port Royal, 8.C. | s 0 35 
Annopolis, N.S. |s/3 0| Hel!-Gate, a/0 30} Portsmouth, a, oy go) 
Boston, aj}2 15 Huntington, a| 2 Providence, 

Bridgetown, E.J.|a)} 0 45! Ipswich, a} 4 |Purrysburg,,S. C.) s . ‘ 
Burlington, aj 0 20! Jamestown, al0 50| Quebec, ald 4 
Cape Ann, aj2 40) Kingston Esopns,| a|5 Reedy Island, aj2 50 
Cape Fear, aj/l 10|Main Ocean, s|0 45|Rhode Island,{ |s |0 15 
Cape Hatteras, jaf2 0/Nantuket Shoals} s|1 30!Salem, jai2' 45 
Cape Henry, al2 0 Newburyport, a|2 45|Sandy Hook, s 0 4 
Cape Bay, aj/2 15;New Haven, a/2 13)/Savannah, sjl IQ 
Charleston Lt. H.ja}2, 0) New Providence,}s | 1 25;Saybrook, a 215 
Cape May. s|0 45;Newtown Liding,| a} bl 0;)Sanbury, Ga. a/0 30 
Cape Cansn, s|0 30/Penobscot, * ,, | a/3. 0) Tybee Bar, afO0 15 | 
Fairfield, a|2 0} Philadelphia, a/5 0! White Stone, 2: 45 
Geergetown Bar,|s|2 0| Piscatawey, a|2 40) Wiliamsburg,Va. |a (2 35 © 
Guildtord. aj l 30; Plymouth, -a|l 35) Wilmington, Del. |a {3 20 } 


Nat 


& 


EEE ———————————— SECRETE AED ORTON AR ROE NET NCL? RETO IE CSE ae 


zt 
| 1st Month. 





| 
| 
2 
icici 





NF OO ON AOA 09 So 


a 





26 





~ Hath at aie 


Full@ id. Yh. Full@ id. 9h. 46m. morn.. 
Third Qr. 9d. Ih. 44m. even. 
New © 16d. 7h. 49m. even. 

Various Phenomenas & KR. & S. 





| pt 4@r. high. Perhaps7 17 


& aa I[i.d. 1820. 7 16 
| 30 7\ [snow. 7 Py 
net abe eon 2stat.7 14 


JANUARY 








| UU ult : u Hi i! ” es i ! 











“epi uo surgeq 














6\Circumcis. 0 © H.I7 274 
Cold |7 27/\4 
Cj2d 8S. aft. Christmas.'7 27|4. 


3/2fsouth 9 24, 7 2714 
A\Epiphany. @in ap.'7 27/4 
5|Betelguese s. 10 39./7 27/4 
6|N.O. Bat. 1815. (7 27/4 
71@ Q. Cold winds.'7 27 A 
(jist Sun. aft Epiph.|7 26/4 
2\Dr. Dwight d. 1817.7 26/4 


3/7x*s. set. 3 45. 7 264° 


4\Cher. Miss est. 1817.\7 25/4 
5;|®runs low. Cold 4 
: 2 south 8' 42, 
penetrating 
C Franklin 5. 1706. 
2}@in per. [winds. 
shes rises 1 41. 
4j@ent. wy. 

5\Agnes. Snow 
6 2{ south 813. @¢? 

7| [may be existed. 
Crd Sun. aft. Epiph, 
2. Conv. of St. Paul. 
3 2zf sets 3 20. 


~y 
nw 





WwW A Oe 





ioe eS ee 





i bet RE BD tO AO ADD AO AY AD bY AS AD 


@eoqocrnrses 


8| 5 Betelguese s.9 16. |7 16 





4 
4 
4 
4 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 
5 


Alj2 
42 
43 


45 
46 
47 
A$ 
49 


50; 


ee ee oe A ee 
5 SE EEE 





| 





#% de. 





22 
29 


fincreasese7 27\4 44/22 


22 
22, 
22 
22 
22 
21 
at 
21 
21 
21 


17 
17 


-—— oe 


eG Rs in i Ge ca inne AER ane QAOnRSERN WeERENe: ETULIONS 





1 
56 
51 
45 
38) 
31 
24 
16 
4 
59 


50) 


40 
30) 





Gg rFiree Gr 23d. 11h. 22m. morn. 
Full-@ 31d. 3h. 33m. morn. | 





























Ww. | 














©; ® R. Msou./H. 
Scirises. |morn.|8 38 
251g 1210 3219 22 
QZ 10/1 + 20!to al 
198: 712 Giro 37 
myi9 82 5011 12 ! 
1139 593 33/11 45 
25/10 55/4 ere 
11 5914 5810 57 | 
19;mMorn.|9 AQ 84 | 
mio 506 252 16 
13/1 497 11/3 14 | 
26:2 498 114. 26 
113 49/8 54\5 39 | 
2314 499 506 49 
ysis 4610 48/7 43 
22) sets. {11 478 ah 
wl§  10lev. 469 19 
297. 93\L 4810 5 
18 352 29/10 49 | 
229 473 33111 33 
"110 564 26! morn | 
20! morn.'9 15/0 19 || 
s10 «64/6 101 6 
Tri2 13/7 54/2 | 
1438 123 464 2! 
264 719 8715 20 | 
4 5710 276 37 
2115 AL 11 15\7 39 |f 
5SU6 21 morn. i8 28 | 


16) rises.|0 2/9 £10 | 
ra 





9\ 3iPurif. B. V. M. 
3) 4|® in apogee, High 


Dee wWwo He COHNVYAMA ws? 


B2 DO BD DS DO DO AD Om om oe et ot ot oe 








43) 





Third Qr. 8d 8h. 43m. morn 
New © 15d.6h. 30m. morn 


Varwous Phenomena i | Ge 5. uc. ®, 
i7 131a 
712 


2f sets. 2.56. 


N. W. winds. 
Earthq. at Sic. 1780) 
Sirius s. 9 32 © Q | 
‘Sexacesimad 9b. 

Probably some 
2fsets 2 25. [snow. 
Procyon sou, 10 9. 
@rurs low. Windy 
Sirius south. 9 8. 

Cold and 
\Quinguages, Valen 
® in per. [stormy.| 
Superior 6 @%. 





Ash Wednesday. 
® 23. Piercin | 
2fvsets,.1 49, 
Ist S. im Lent. 








1©2.. [ weather. 


co 3 
WaMSR YS PON AeA wwWONAUME ON OstAN 


ADA AANMNNANNANN 


®enters 3. | winds.'6 


W’n. b:1732..6 © bi 
@runshigh. Steady|6 
S. Matthias. 6 

Winter ¢ 


‘Elias Hicks d. 1830.16 








| 28! Clzd Sun. in Lent. 


4) 





Ff 115 
7 105 


915 


85 





| First Qr. 21d. 11h. even | 
© (@seiH W. 
15) Su. 6 54| 0 47] 9 46 
1716 5090) 7 51| 1 30)10 19 
18 33/21) 8 47 13}10 50, 
19 ~ 9 43 2 55/11 20 
2015 571510 40, 3 3711 52 
22 2711 37| 4 20eyv, 23 
23,15 20 m\morn. | 5, 0 58 
2415 121) 0 35 5 52) 1 35 
25.14 42 ¢] 1 34, 6 42) 2 22) 
27 17] 2, $2| 7.35.3 27 
28 vs 3 29' 8 3014 514 
2913 4315) 4 23 9 28) 6 11 
30:13 2330 5 1410 26) 7 22 
32 ae 6 O11 25} 8 13 
33): 30) sets.'ev. 22} 9 1 
34 Zi3€| '7 24 I 19 9 48 
3512 1130) 8 37] 2 1410 32 
3611 407) 9 49 3 911 16 
38.11 193010 58) 4 311 59 
39 5/| 8 morn. 50 morn. 
4010 3527/0 4 50, 0 43.5 
4110 1401/1 6 6 42 1 27) 
42; 9 52:23] 2. Qt, 3462 18 6 
Ad 1.2 54)-8 24.3 25 
45 is} 3 40), 9 13) 4 51 
46 GL} 4 21.9 59, 6 12 
47\ 8 23|\1 | 4 5810 45! 7 23 
48) 8 025! 5.311 28 8 9 


wy 






































a 
Bg 
» 


a 


3d Month. ° MARCH. 1847. 


at 












, 


Hath 31 days. 
‘Aepuopl uo suisag 








| \ z LUNI [een ae on SH  — 


Full @ id. 10h. 13m. even. First Qr. 23d. Oh. 45m. even. 
| Third Qr, 9d. 11h. 43m. morn. | Full @ 31d. 4h. 21m. even. 
{ New ® 16d. 4h. 15 m. even. . 








—— 


[| VariousPhenomena.' # ih. S.'2 de,@ @® 8. @ sou, H. W 


——— eo 
= 

































































j 
1! 2/St. David. © Cold 6 375 49| 7 87/my| 6 2 mor, 8 50 
| 
=: rig in apogee. 16 35,5 50) 7 15/18) rises.| O 11) 9 24) 
3) 4 weather 6 34)5 52! 6 52/30) 7 361 0 53! 9 56 | 
4 519 By ite, G 32/5 53 2 29| = 8 33) 1° 36)10 A 
5| OM Q. continues '§ 31)/5 54 6/24; 9 30} 2 19110 54 
6 7 Procyon south 8 35.6 295 55) 5 42mi10 27) 3 811 25 { 
7} Oj3d Sun. in Lent. (6 27/5 56| 5 1918)11 24/3 agit 53 jh 
g| 2'Blustermeg. 6 2615 57) 4 56/30) morn.) 4 36iev. 27 
9 3 Regulus Bi. 10 51.16 245 58) 4 32) 7/ 0 22) 5 26, 1 5 | 
0) 4)@ runslow. Morel6 235 59] 4 926) 1 18] 6 19) I 51 | 
HRP [moderate.|6 21/6 0) 3 45\ys| 2 11) 7 14) 2 50 | 
9| 6 Martyr Gregory. 6 196 2! 3 2224/3 1/8 9 4 12 
13| 7/4 discovered 1781.6 186 3] 2 5847) 3 4819 6) 5 39 
4 C Mid. L. 8’s g. el. (6 166 4) 2 35/23) 4 3110 3) 6 56 
15) 2Jackson b. 1767. (6 146 5| 2 11/3€] 5 12/11 0 7 52 | 
: 16 3\@in per. Windy 6 13/6 6) 1 47/23) sets. |11 56, 8 40 
rd meh Patrick. ho 116 7| 1 23/7] 7 24iev. 52) Y 25 
18) 5) 2. cold.6 94 8) 1 O24 8 36,1 4810 9 
19) 6|Procyon sou. 744. 6 86 9 0 36/%| 9 46 2 44/10 53 
3(| 7| Snow or rain. 6 66 10) S. 12:23110 52) 3 39'11 36) 
21 Ci5th. S.inLent. © (6 (4/6 11)N. 11)/Ti/11 53) 4 34\morn, | 
22) 2,@runs high.[ent.f.|6 316 12) 0 ooze morn.| 5 28} 0 18) 
123) 3\Look for a storm. (6 1/6 13; 0 59/35} 0 48) 6 20) 1 3 | 
24, 4 Gsets 8/14. + 596 14) 1 22/15 1 377 Gigs 
| 5Annun. of B. V. M.5 58/6 15) 1 46,27) 2 20! 7 57 2 54 
26) 6 Unsettled. (5 56:6 16) 2 OG) 2 58) 8 43) 4 16, 
av ee dae de 41. [5 546 17| 2 $3/22| 2 83) 9 27| 5 37 ] 
28; C\Palm Sunday. 5 5316 18) 2 56iny; 4 410 9 6 49 
i 2) 2. @in anogeis and 5 51/6 20) 3 20115 4.3410 52) 7 42 | 
| 30 3}. [irksome weather.|5 496 21) 3 4827 s) 2il¢ 34} 8 21 
g 31| 4Inferior 6 © &. 5 4816 22) 4 6 =! rises.!morn.| 8 52 


~_ 


5 ee ee, Oe ee. By Seen ea ae Semen a ee oe eo ee ee 
ei cect ccczscsenin oan cee ieuesat CEE esse 7 
Gites Cee BITC ES cl Eee, MAA 




















—=OVUVANAVHK WON COO CNAVA ON 





Hath 30 days. 





2 


C 








® &. 


Easter Sun. 6 © Hi 
Regulus sou.9 5. | 
®r. low. [unsettled. 
qsets § 47, 
Now probably 
[a storm. 
Spica NY sou. 0 6. 
Low Sunday. More 
[ pleasant. 
® in perigee &. stat. 
® °3. Frequent 
[showers. | 
Spica sou. 1138. 
Franklin d. 1790. 
2d Sun. aft. Easter. 
®runs high. Quite 
©ent. B. Warm 
and pleasant. 
2f sets 10 23. 
St. George. 
Spica my sou. 11.7. 
St. Mark. Many 








wenOQwoaunwenwnOnaunan ONOnNaYygaAon 


4 


29) 9 
30! 6 ¢sets9 41. 


® in apogee. 





3’sgr.elong. @ 2.9 
showers.|9 


still 5 


CK nr 


Man aranr ar a Ga aa Ua aA Goa ao a Goa OF 


5 


APRIL, 


Third Qr. 8d. 10h. 30m. morn. 
New @ 15d. 1h.26 m. morn. 


Various Phenomena. £3 RK. & 5. & de. O) © KR. | 
The weather 5 
6 Jefferson b. 1743. 5 
Ae Friday. 








Full @ 30d. Sh. 30m. morn. 
466 23| 4 29=| 7 24) 0.17) 9 24 
456 24, 4 53m) 8 21) 1 119 56 
436 25| 5 1615] 9 19} 1 46110 27 
4116 26) 5 392710 16 2 34110 57 
4016 27; 6 14 |t1 12 $25) 30 
38/6 28) 6 24/23|morn| 4 14ev, 3 if 
3616 291 6 47\v3! 0 55 70 435 
35/6 30| 7 9201 0 56.6 J) 1 32 | 
$316 311 7 32.21 1 421 6.55! 2 31) 
32'6.32) 7 5418] 2 25) 7 5013 52 | 
306 33} 8 163¢| 3 5) 8 4515 l4ie- 
2816 34| 8 38117) 3 43) 9 39] 6 29 | 
2716 35} 9 Op) 4 21110 34] 7 28 
25/6 86) 9 21/17/ 4 5911 30| 8 16 | 
2416 37] 9 48) sets. lev. 26/9 1 
22/6 38/10 4/16] 8 31) 1 23) 9 46 
2116 389)10 26\T7| 9 37) 2 1910 32 
196 40/10 4715|10 36) 3 15)11 14 | 
186 4111 7/28)11 29} 4 10)11 56)8 
166 42)!1 28:9 morn.| 5 Fonoren | , 
1516 43)11 49\24| 0 16) 5 52) O 4018 
1316 44112 9Q) O 57] 6 39) 1 28 | 
12/6 45/12 29118) 1 33] 7 24] 2 id 
116 4612 49/3012 68 73 36 | 
96 47/13 Olnp! 2 36) 8 49) 4 51) 
86 4813. 2824 3 5| 9 32 6 3|| 
66 49)L3 47\2| 8 34/10 14 7 2ih- 
56 5014 618) 4 3/10 58 7 sah 
46 5214 2530) 4 S411 43) 8 20] 
26 53\14 44m) risesJmorn.| 8 54 
a ee 




















BR), CE ays cali P naps 
ae CERERITH: DS 1 QCRN NTA ALA er ETD 

















First Qr. 22d. 4h. 13m. morn. 





CSP ES STE PSN ST ANSTO PA LED TVS ee Gens 2 Oe Po PSD _ aR 
————}$ $e ES 


Ath Month. 


= aie 


1847. 





| 


“AEpsiny y, uo sursag| 


























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Third Qr.7d. 5h. 53m. even. 
New @ 14d. 10h.27m. morn. 


First Qr. 21d. 9h. 3m. even. 
Full @ 29d. 9h. 50m. even. 










































































Various Phenomena.| 2 R28 8/2 de. ®) © R. ® soul, W. 
7\Sts. Philip §& James.5 16 5415 2'1| 8 10) 0 30} 9 aT 
C/4th S. a. East. 5 06 5515 20/¢/19 8 1 19110 oO 
2i@zunslow. Fined 596 5615 38/2010 2) 2 41/10 33 
3 growing 4 576 5715 55 y3il0 53) 3 4)11 >| 
4\N. Buona. d. 1821. /4 566 58/16 131611 41) 3 57/11 45 
Pe © Us [ weather. 4 556 59/16 30/30) morn.| 4 5Sljev. 29 
6\2¢ sets 9 39, 4 547 016 4627) 0 24) 5 44) 1 19] 
7|Spica ng sou. 1012.4 537 117 3/28 1 4) 6 37| 2 20 | 
CiRogation Sunday. |4 517 217 19)3€| 1 41] 7 30) 3 32 
2 Now plant thej4 507 317 3927) 2 18) 8 23) 4 ot 
3i/@in' per.  [maize.4 49:7 4)17 51/7) 2 54,9 166 1 | 
4\A. T. S.anniv.® &./4 48,7 5/18 ~626| 3 3110 13] 7 0 
S/Ascension Day. (4 477 618 21)y| 4 11j)L1 6) 7 51 | 
6/Arcturus sou: 10 40.4 467 618 3625 sets. | ev. 3) 8 41 
/ ata Warm4 45:7 718 50)[7| 8 20) 1 0] 9 28 | 
C\sun. aft. Ascension.4 447 819 423) 9 171 1.5610 12 
y 1 ae [showers.|4 437 9/19 18/95/10 8] 2 5010 55 
8| 9sets 10:12. [1780.4 43)7 10/19 31,3910 52} 3 42/11 37 

4,Dark day in N. E.,/4 427 1319 44;Q./11 31) 4 32\morn. 
Mhataycte d. 1834. |4 41.7 1219 57)44 morn.) 5 18) 0 20° 
6 enters Ty. Hot'4 407 1320 9126/0 6 6 3) 1 5 
7 Spica ny sou. 917..'4 397 1420 21 ny| 0 37) 6 46) 1 56 | 
C Whit Sun. @in : ap. 4 88:7 45/20 3320) 1 7) 7.28) 2 52) 
2 Q. Victoria b. 1819.4 387 16120 45.2.) 135,810) 4 1 | 
3@® RQ. Pleasant 4 $7,7 17/20 56)14; 2) 4) 8 53,5 3k 

4Calvin died, 1564. |4 367 £721 6/26) 2 34) 9 38) 6 a 
5)Arcturus sou. 9 49./4 S67 28/21 i7/m 3 610 24) 6 58 {f 
6|Wm. Pitt born, 1759/4 35!7 19/24 2620) 3 42/b1 13) 7 wolf 
7 ‘Hot and'4°35'7 20/21 86) ¢ |rises. |morn.| 8 23 | 
©\Trinity Sunday. |4 34/7 21/21 4516) 7 56,0 49 1 
Qeruns low. [dry.j4 347 2121 54/30i § 50| 0 581 9 38) 

ee | 








Third Qr. 5d. LLh. 10m. even. 
New ® 12d. 7h. 56m. even. 











First Qr. 20d. 2h. 36m. even 
Full @ 28d Sh. 27m. morn. 























| 
| —) Various Phenomena \®& R. 











@ 51g 
1\ 3|@ sets 1022. Fairl4 33:7 22/22 
9| 4lArcturus sou. 9 25, |4 33'7 23/22 
3 5|0 © b. [and warm.|4 32|7 23/22 
4| GSuperior dO 8. |4 32/7 24/22 
5| 7\Dr. Worcester d. |4 32/7 25/22 
6| Clist. Sun. ait. Trin. |4 31)7 25/22 
| 7| 2/@ in per. [1845.|4 3117 26122 
g| 3'@ 23. Jackson died, |4 31,7 27/22 
9| 4S. 1, Southard born/4 31/7 27/22 
10| 5\Arct. s. 8 54. [1787.\4 807 28/23 
11| 6\St. Barnabas. Very/4 307 2823 
12| 7\N. Y. incorp. 1665.4 307 29/2 
13| C'@runs high, warin|4 30/7 2923 
14) 2\9 sets 10 21. 4 307 30:23 
[Ls 3)br. 11 50.[weather4 30:7 3023 
16.4; @¢- __ [1775.|4 30/7 S023 
| 17; 5 Bunker Hill Battle,/4 30/7 31/23 
+, 18| OBat. Waterloo 1815.4 307 31/23 
| 1y| 7 Perhaps thunder. 4 307 31/23 
[| 22 clasts co! 6 @2u.14 307 32/23 
; | 91| 2;@ent. %.[showers|4 31/7 32/23 
22 31© &- A 31/7 32/23 
| 93| 4/Antares sou. 10 13./4 31/7 32/23 
24 5|St, John Bap. stat.4 31/7 32/23 
256 Showers in|4 32'7 33/23 
| 26) 7 various|4 32/7 33/23 
27| Cl4th Sun. aft. Trin, |4 32/7 33/23 
| 28| 2\Madison died 1836./4 33/7 33/23 
29| 3\St. Peter. [places. |4 33/7 33/23 
| 30} 4\ Q@ sets 19 6. JA 33\7 33123 























dc. @ @ R,.@®sou,H. W. 
2\v5| 9 40] 1 52/10 16 
10|27|10 25) 2 47/10 53 
18/11 6) 3 41/11 35 
25125|11 44| 4 85lev. 19 
32|/%€\morn.| 5 27) 1 10! 
39\23|.0 20} 6 19} 2 8 | 
45\"| 0 '55)-7 11) 3 me | 
50121, 1 3a| 8 3] 4 25, 
561812 8] 8 56 5 80) 
1/20) 2 491 9 51) 6 86) 
5itr| 3 34/10 46|-7 a6 
9/17} sets {11 42) 8 28 
13\%| 7. 58jev. 38) 9 14] 
1614) 8 46) 1.31) 9 58 | 
1927 9 27 2 22110°39 { 
2110 .4| 3 11/11 19] 
23/22|)10 38] 3 57111 ap 
25\nv\11 8) 4 41k) morn. 
26/1611 37) 5 23) 0 391 
27/28|morn.| 6 6) 1 19 
Q7\~| 0 66482 5) 
27/22] 0 35| 7 82) 2 58 | 
27\a1| I. 6 8 174 8) 
2616, 1 39,9 45 a! 
25/29) 2 17, 9 551 6 6) 
23:\¢| 3 O|L0 47) 7 2 | 
21/25) 3 49\k1 42) 7 496 
18] 79 rises. | morn.) 8 35 ; 
15\23| 8 22 0 38) 9 17 
12, 9 5| 134110 O 





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GROEN CARRE: eer eC QE SRE eer 
























amine id 
1847 | 
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|| 
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1 ‘Phird Qr. 5d. 3h. 46m. morn. First Qr. 20d. 7h. 56m. morn. 
New ©, 12d. 6h. 42m. morn. | Full @ 27d. 5h. 12m. even. 


“1 1Various Phenomena. Rt Se dce\®| © R..@ sou.| H. W. 
{| 5|\Wyomihg massacre.4 347 3323 8.27 











9°45) 2.29/10 42 
| 6 Vis. B.V.M. [1778/4 347 33,23 4/3€|10 23} 3: 23/01 25 
706 ¢. Very|4 35,7 3223 0.2010 58) 4 I6/ev. 10 
CIndependence. 4.357 32/22 5517 11 34 
‘ 2 D Re hot 
| 3] [ weather. 
AlAntares sou. Y 18. 
5|b rises 10 20. 
6,Cool breezes. 
7\@r- high, OOW. 
%’s or. elongation. | 
2; Qsets 9 47. 
3'Perhaps rain. 
| 4\Frorev. com. 1789.' 
K pion Clinton b 1739 
16| 6'Antares sou. 8 43. 
1A 7 Quite |4 447 
q Ci7th Sun. aft; Trin. |4 45'7 
2\@ 3.  ~ [pleasant.|4 467 
3|b rises 9 32, 4 47\7 25)|20 43/30/11 38 
4\Burns died, 1796. |4 43;7 24: 
5 Expect4 487 23) 
6|® enters (. [rain.4 49|7 22/20 Sif} O 53 
7\6 stat. Ht stat. 4 50;7 2219 56,20 1 38 
Cl o’sgrel. St. James4 51,7 2119 433) 2 30/10 24 
i 2\St. Anne. 4 52/7 20)19 30/17} 3 29)11 21 
B27] 3). More |4 53|7 1919 16) rises.| morn. 
4/28] 4\Vega south 107. |4 5417 1819 3/16) 7 42) 0 18 
4.29) 5 [showers. |4 55/7 17|18 49|3¢| 8 22| 1 14 
4, 30; 6|/Dog d’sb. © Saliahio 5617 16|18 35/15) 8 59} 2 . 9/10 
¥\ 31| 7/5 south 2 23. 4.56 












867 3222 49/18morn. 
377 8222 44/y! 0 10 
377 3122 8716 0 4 
887 31/22 31/30] 1 31 
83/7 3122 24\11| 2.17 


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4 

4 39:7 30:22 17/27 
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7 1518 20/30' 9.35] 3 3/11 








‘kenung uo sursaq 





<a, Sen en A ak 
Ss-- Lia oes 


Third Qr. 3d. 9h. 3m. morn. | First Qr. 19d. Oh. Sea, morn. 
















































































| New ® 10d. 7h. 32m. even. Full @ 26d.. 1h. 13m. morn. 
| Various Phenomena. ae R. tc Seed N ® | @) R., © sou. H. W. 
| | C9th Sun. alt. Trin, 4 577 1418 5.7 |10 12 3 BELL 53 
i 9/916 @¢é.. Pleasant/4 587 1317 502910 51) 4 49'ey. 41 ¢ 
| 3\ 3\Burr’s.trial com. |5 5917. 12/17 34/~y|11 32) 5 42) 1 380 
i! 4, 4 bgou. 2. 6. [1807.5 O17 1117 19/26, morn|.6 36) 2 24 
| 5| 5| [for the season. [5 1/7. 1017 2\77)0 16) 7 30) 3 27 
6 6 Fransfiguration., |5 27 816 46231 4/8 23) 4 45 
| “| 7inf.g © Y.Perhapss .3\7 7/16 30\95|1 56) 9 16! 6 2| 
g' C10th Sun. aft. Trin.5 47, 616 1319/2 52/10 8 7 12 
| 9 2) érises 10 8. some 57 515 569/38 4940 58) 8 4| 
10 3\St. Lawrence. want 67 415 38/14 sets. |11 45) 8 51 
| 11| 4\Vega sou. 912. of 77 215 20/27/7 10) ey.31| 9 29 | 
4, 22) 5|G.TY. b. 1762. rain./5 8)7 115° 3inyi7 41) 1 15/10 3 
} 13) 6Q, Adelaide b..1792'5 | 9/7 Q\14 44/21 8-10) 1.58/10 37 { 
| 44) T|@in apogee. 9 106 5814 26/8 39) 2.4011 8 
| 15) Cilih 8. aft. T.O@ Q.5 116 5714 7149 § 8 23/11 40 | 
116) 2;Choe. miss. es. 1818/5 126 5613 49269 39) 4. G6\morn. , 
| 17| 3) 9 stationary. 5 13/6 54|18 30: mj10 12| 4.50.0 12 | 
18 4\b south 1 8. Clondy)5 146 5313 102010 49) 5 36 0 46 
| 19| 5/7 rise 1015. and> 15/6 5112 51 7/11 31) .6 25) 1 22 | 
' 90 6 perhaps|> 16/6 50:12 31)15|morn! 7 16) 2 10 
[ 21 7'@runs low. [rain.'5 17|6 4812 11280 18 8 9 3 10 | 
/22' Ci12th Sun. aft. Trin. |5 18)6 4711 S5ilysil 12) 9 5) 4 30 
| 23| 2 @enters NY. Windy.|5 19/6 46)11 3125.2 13/10 1) & 45 | 
24) 3.St. Bartholomew. |5 20/0 44/11 11,3 19110 58) 658 
25, 4/3 ’s:gr. elong. 5 21/6 43/10 5025/4 29\11 54) 7 48 | 
; 26) 5 - [brilliancy./5 22/6 41/10 29) 3 rises.,morn.| 8 38 1 
|! 27| 6 ® in per. 'Q at gr.|o 23/6 39)10 8/2517 32) 0 50! 9 24 {f 
28) 7) St. Augustine.® 3.5 24\6 38) 9 47/7/38 10) 1 4610 7 
| 29) CSt. John Bap. beh, |5 25/6 36) 9 26248 49) 2 4110 50|f 
80) 2\Paley born, 1743.. |5 26/6 35}9 5 8/9 381) 3 3611 35 
{| 311 3 Quite cool. 5 27|\6 33/8 4323/10 15].4 gliev.18 | 
Bt Ese Sa RS A a Rn a 


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9th Month. SEPTEMBER. 1847. 











sepsoupaa, uo sursag 
























































Third Qr. id. 4h. L3im. even. first Wr. b7d. Zh. 25m. even. 

New @ 9d. 10h. 52m. morn. | Fuil 24d. Oh. 29m. morn. | 

(Various Phenomena, 2% R.% S.\g¢d.N ©.© R..@sou.H. W. | 

1; 4g south 4 1. Very5 286 32) 8 Q2Uifi1l 3) 5 26/1. 6! 

2.5.8 Qb- pleasant 296 30 8 02611 54] 6 20) 1 56 | 
3} 6}@runshigh. [days.|5 30/6 28| 7 88%\morn.| 7 13) 3 31 

4| 7:Altair south 8 49.|5 316 27| 7 15/16 048) 8 5] 4 24 | 
5| Cil4th Sun. aft. Trin./5 316 25) 6 53:29)'1 44) 8 55|.5 44) 

6| 2\Lafayette b. 1757. 15 326 .24| 6 31\.| 2 41) 9 43) 6 58 | 
7| 3\Han, More d. 1833.5 836 2216 9123 3 3810 29 7 49| 

g| 4\Nativity B. V. M. |5 346 20| 5 46iny| 4 3611 13] 8 31 | 
9| 5|Perhaps rain. 5 356 19|'5 23/17) sets.|11 56) 9 6 

10) 6| 9 stat’ Dog d’send.|5 366 17| 5 129) 6 42ev. 38) 9 39 | 
11 7t@in apogee, @ 82.13 37'6 15| 4 38) 7.11) 1 2119 8 

12) C\l5th Sun, aft. Trin.5 386 14) 4 15/23) 7 41) 2 3/10 39 | 
2Quite cold winds. [5 3916 12) 3 52)m/| $8 13) 2 47\11 10 

| 3\Moscow burnt 1812'5 406 10) 3 2917} 8 48) 3 32/11 89 
4\Sur. of N.Y. 1776.15 41:16 9} 3 6129! 9 27) 4 19/morn. 

5 Look for 5 426 7/2 43/7/10 11) 5 8! 0 13 | 

6 @runslow. wets 436 5,2 202311 1/ 5 59) 0 48) 

ZFomalhaut s.1058.5 446 4) 1 50911 57| 6 52) 1 382 | 
Cisup. 6d © 8 weather.5 456 2| 1 3320imorn| 7 46) 2 32 

2\msouth10 45. |5 466 0 1 10, @ 58) 8 41) 8 52 
3)St. Matthew. More'5 475 59) 0 4618 2° 5) 9 36 5 15, 

4) g rises 7 58. 5 485 57N. 233¢) 3 15:10 321 6 31 

5i@enters =. rains 495 55/0 018) 4 2811 28) 7 27 | 

A| 6|®in per. $ sta.M 9 505 5558, 24 "| rises.morn.| 8 151% 
7| [may be expected.5 515 52, 0 47/18) 6 42 0 25) 8 58 

Cii7th San. aft. Trin.5 525 50) 1 11)y) 7 24) 1 21) 9 43 | 
2\Perhaps frost. 5 535 48) 1 34/18 8 8) 2 1810 238) 

3} b south 1011. 9 945, A7| 1 57 T7)\.8 56 8 1641 al 
29 4St. Mich.  [high./5 5555 45) 2 21161 9 48) 4 1211 56 

BU) 5\St. Jerome. © runs'5 565 43! 2 4413010 42,5 Tey. 43 | 





| 


~~ 


| ‘Siord Qr. Ld. 2h. 40m. morn. | Full @ 23d. Gh. 40m. even, | 
| 





»New ® 9d. 4h. 11m. morn. Third Qr. 30d. 5h. Om. even, 
First Qr. 17d.2h. 45m. morn. 


Various Phenomena. #8 KR. & S.\ fs de. ® © R.® sou H.W. | 










































































| 1 AB cath 2 iT 5 575 42/8 Sigil 39|.6. 1 dao 
2;\ 7; Cold blustering 5 585 40) 3 3 26 morn. 6 52) 2 38! 
| 3| C\Inferior 6 © 9. 5 5915.38) 3 54,Q. 0 36) 7 All 8 59] 
#412 [winds. 6 015 37] 4 17/20) 1 33| 8 27) 5 20 
| 5| 3Brainard died 1747.6 15 35] 4 40 ny| 2 30| 9 11] 6 32 
6| 4b sets3.7. Frosty6 2/5 33) 5 4/14) 3 27,9 55) 7 24 
| 7| S'Sirius rises0 33. (6 45 32 5 27/26] 4 2310 37, 8 3 | 
i! 8 6G @inapogee.. ©Q.6 55 30) 5 50) 5 1811 19) 8 38! 
| 9| 7» south 9 26. G 65 29) 6 1320 sets. ev. 2) 9 8 | 
10, Cie Ow. [mormings.6 75 27) 6 35a}, 6.15; O 49) 9 40 
| 11) 2Bahamas dis. 1492. |6 8&5 25) 6.5814) 6 49).1 300 41 | 
12,37 & ssouth 217. |6 95 24 7 2126 7 27| 2 1610 41! 
| 13 4002. Cold6 105 2% 7 43.2) 8 9/3 4)11 12 | 
14) 5) @ south 1 16. 6 11/5 21) 8 . 620) 8 56,3 5411 45 
| 15) 6 @runs low.  frosty,6 126 19) 8 28)\y¥5|} 9 48] 4 45 morn. | 
16, 7 [mornings. |6 1385 18) 8 501610 46) 5 37) 9 23 
| 17 C/20th Sun. aft. Trin.6 145 16) 9 12/2911 48 6 30) 4 | 
H18) 2S8t. Luke. ‘6 155 15) 9 34 morn.| 7 231.2 4 
| 19| 3.;Cornwal. sur. 1781.)6 175 13) 9 56/27| 0 54) 8 17! g 21 | 
20) 47s south 146... j¢ 185 12/10 18i5¢) 2, 3| 9 11!) 4 47} 
| 21 5 Perhaps rain. 6 195 1010 3926 38 1410 6 6 8 | 
, 22] 6] g-stationary. © e.6 205 911. NP) 4 2711 2)-7 oO 
| 23) 7 @ent. 1]. Oin per.6 21/5. 711 22/26,rises. |11 59) » 50 
i 24| Ci/21st Sun. aft. Trin, |6 225 6'11.43)/x%| 5 56morn.| g 36° 
1 95] 21 9 rises 4 0. 6235 5/12 4126 6 44] 0 58) g 21 || 
| 26) 3 Expect more(6 24'5 3/12 24/0! 7.36] 1 5619 8 
27| 4 @runs high. [rainj6 265 2)12 45/25) g 81] 2 55)19 52 | 
28) 5)Sis. Simon & Jude. [6275 O13 + 5\%| 9 28) 3 Olli 36 
1 29] 6] south 8 4. 6 28/4 5913 252210 27) 4 45ley, 21 | 
| 30) 7John Adams b.17356 29/4 5813.45! Q/11 25] 5 36 y 11 
g SCS és. Cold. J6 acid 57l14 517 morn 6 2. 2 8| 
{ 


ai a a a i a ey Sh ee eee 
mares aemuemuns ~ Qc earReT BOOS A aN CRED RIOR EY TTS ETA COL CE CIES aalacnanes < —| 
\ 


| ere nme cree comer: rae creer incraenee, RANT EA CRIT comagy (ATR. AREER US 


| {2 Ath Month... - NOVEMBER. 1847, uf 

















- Hath 30 days. 
‘<upuoW wo sulsoq 


Larne cea: +. el alia Ree Me eambaedee So ES aoe see 
New © 7d. 10h. lim. even. | Full @ 22d. 5h. 8m. morn. 
First Qr. 15d. lh. 19m. even. | Third Qr. 29d. 11h. 26m. morn. 
















































































| | '\Various Phenomena. #8 KR.) 5.| 2 del ®1® R.® S./ H.W. 
M1) Q2|All Saints. . Cold|6 32/4.55/14 24/6.) 0 23) 7 9) 3 18 
| 2| 3 [winds./6 33\4 54|14 43jny| 1 20) 7 53} 4 38 | 
Ht! 3) 4|$ soutn 11 25. 6 34/4 53/15 2123] 2 16) 8 35}. 5 50 
|| 4\ 5|@in apogee. ®Q16 35/4 52/15 211! 3 12) 9 18] 6 49 
5| 6 Ygr.elong. Clear6 36.4 51/15 3917| 4 8/10 0) 7 31) 
| 6| 7|Qrises 3 23. and6 38/4 50/15 5729! 5 4/10 43) 8 8) 
4 7| Ci2tstationary. [cold |6 39/4 48/16 15|m| seés. |11 28) § Al | 
| | 8| 2) Qategr. brilhancy. |6 40/4 47|/16 33/23} 5 27lev. 14) 9:14 | 
9| 3i7*ssouth O27. (6 41/4 4616 50)/| 6 7| 1 2) 9 45 
10 4\b stationary. More6 42)4 45/17 aie 6 53) 161/10 18 
11) 5} runs low. [pleas’t.6 44'4 44/17 2430! 7 44] 2 4210 51 | 
| 12 6| g south 10 39. 6 45/4 43/17 A1\VS| 8 40] 3 33/11 26 | 
His! 7 grises 3 12. 6 46\4 42)17 57|26| 9 39) 4 25:morn 
fiial C24th Sun. alt. Trin. |6 47/4 42/18 13,47/10 42/5 17, 0. 6 | 
115] 2) 0 stationary. Look|6 484 41/18 28/2311 48} 6 9| 0 52; 
116) 3 [for. rain.|6 5014 4018 43)3€\morn.| 7 1) 1 47 
Wiz) 42¢south 3 45. 6 51/4 3918 5821] 0 56] 7 53] 2°55 
]}33, 5|gsouth10 9.6 &.16 5214 3819 13/7| 2 5) 8 47\ 4 14 
4,19) 6 Hard|5 53/4 3819 27|20) 3 16) 9 42) 5 28 
20 A hea perigee. [frost.\6 544 3719 41/8} 4 28/10 38) 6 32 
4, 21| C25th Sun. aft. Trin.}6 55)4 3619 54:19 5 40/11 37) 7 27 
fl 22 2\Oen. fr Fairj6 57|\4 3620 7D irzses.jmorn.) 8 18 
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ar Se eg i j 


MISCELLANEQUS, 


THE RE-UNITED, 





A TALE OF TRUTH. 


In the evening of the day on which Attce H——— arrived at 
Ss , a great temperance meeting was to be held in one of the 
churches. Her friend, who had become enthusiastic in the cause, 
urged her to go tothis meeting, which Alice did, although it was 
with some reluctanve. ‘The house was excessively crowded, both 
ahove and below. ‘he preliminaries usually appertaining to such 
meetings having been arranged, a brief opening address was made 
by one of the ministers. A reformed man then gave the audience 
his experience with great effect, After he had finished, there was | 
a pause of nearly a minute. At length aman who had been seated 
far back, with his face partly turned from the audience, arose 
‘slowly from his seat, and moved to the front of the stage. 

A half-expressed exclamation escaped Alice, as her eyes caught 
the well known features of him who had been her husband, while a 
quick thrill ran through her whole frame, which trembled in accord 
with her fluttering heart. The face of Mr. Devaney was greatly 
chaaged since she had last looked: upon it. Its calm, dignified 
elevation had been restored, but with what difference! What he- 
‘fore was cheerful, was sad—very sad. 

‘Mr. President,” he began, in a subdued voice, “although I 
had consented at your urgent solicitation to address this large as- 
sembly to-night, yet | have felt so strong a reluctante in doing so, 
that it has been with the utmost difficulty I have succeeded in drag- 
ging myself forward. But J had passed my word, and J could not 
violateit. As to relating my experience, that [ do not thinkI can 
venture upon. The past | dare not recall. Would to Heaven 
that the memory of just ten years of my life was blotted out.” 

Then he paused a moment, already much affected. Resuming, 
in a firmer voice, he said, | 

‘But something must be said of my own ease, or I shall fail to 
make that impression on your minds that ] wish to produce.” 

Pictures of real life touch the heart with power, while abstract 
_ presentations of truth glitter coldly in the intellectual regions of 
‘the mind, and then fade from the perception like:dissolving figures 
in the diorama. | 

** Your speaker once stood among the first members of the bar, 
in a neighboring state. Nay, more than that—he represented his 





20 


county for three years in the Assembly of the Commonwealth.— 
And more than that still—occupied a seat in Congress for two Con- 
gressional periods,” ie ee a Aes 
At this announcement the stillness of death pervaded the whole 
assembly | | 
“ And yet more than all that,” he continued, his voice sinking 
into alow, thrilling tone—“I once had a tenderly loved wife and 
two sweet children. But all these honors—al] these blessings 
have departed from me,”’ he again continued, his voice growing 
louder and: deeper in his effort’to control himself. ‘ I was un- 
worthy to retain them. My constituents threw me off because I 
had debased myself, and disgraced them. And, worse than all !— 
she, who had Joved me devoted]y—she who had borne me these 
two babes, was forced to abandon me, and seek an asy}um in her 
father’s house. And why ?—Could I become so changed in a few 
‘short years? What power was there so to abase me that my fel- 
low beings spurned, and even the wife of my bosom turned away, 
heart-stricken, from me? Alas! my friends, it was.a mad indul- 
gence in mockery !—a very demon !—a Circe, changing the hu- 
man into the bestial! But for this, and 1 were now an honorable 
and useful representative in Congress, pursuing after my country’s 
eood, and blessed in the home circle with wife and children. 
~“But I have not yet told you all. After my wife separated 
from me, I sank rapidly. A state of perfect sobriety brought too 
many terrible thoughts; I therefore drank more freely, and it was 
but seldom that I was not suffering under the bewildering effects 
of at least partial intoxication. JI remained in the same village 
for some years, but never saw my wife during that time, nora 
glimpse of my children. At last I became so abandoned in my 
course, that my wife, urged on by her friends, filed an application 
for a divorce, and as cause could readily be shown why it should 
be granted, a Separation was legally declared, To complete my 
disgrace, at the next Congressional canvass, | was’ left off the 
ticket, as unfit any longer to represent the district. I then left 
the country and state where I had lived from my boyhood up. 
‘Three years has passed since then, For two years of that — 
period I abandoned myself to the fearful impulse of the appetite I 
had acquired. Then I heard of this new movement—the great 
temperance cause. At first I sneered, then wondered. JI listened 
at last, and finally threw myself upon the great wave that was 
sweeping onward, with the hope of being carried by it far out of 
the reach of danger. I did not hope in vain. It did for me all — 
and more than I thought to be possible. It placed me once more 
upon my feet—it again mademea MAN! A year of sobriety, 
earnest devotion to my profession, and fervent prayer to Him 
who alone gives strength to every good resolution, has restered to 


a1 


me much that Thad lost—but not all—not the richest treasure that 
T proved myself unworthy to retain—not my wife and children !. 
Ah! between myself and these the Jaw has laid its stern impassible 
interdiction! J have ho longer a wife— no longer children—though 
my heart goes out towarils those dearly beloved ones with the ten- 
derest yearnings. Pictures of onr earliest days of wedded love 
are ever lingering in my imagination. [dream of the sweet fire- 
side circle—1 see ever bufore me the once placid face of my Alice, 
as her eyes looked into my own with intelligent confidence, I 
feel her arms twiue about my neck—the music of her voice is 
ever sounding in my ears.’ 

Here the speaker's emotion overcame htm—his utterance be- 
came choked, and he stood silent with bowed head and trembling 
limbs. ‘The dense mass of people were hushed into an oppressive 
stillness, that was broken here and there by half-stifled sobs. 

At this moment there was a movement'n the crowd. A single 
female figure, before whom every one present appeared instinct- 
ively to give way, was seen passing up the aisle. This was not 
observed by Delaney, until she had come nearly in front of the 
platform on which he stood. ‘'lhen the movement caught his ear, 
and lifting his eyes, that instantly fell on Alice—for it was she 
who was pressing onward—he bent forward towards her with sud- 
denly lifted hands and eager eyes, and stood like a statue, until 
she had gained the stand and advanced quickly to his side. Fora 
nroment the two stood thus. The whole audience, thrilled with 
the scene before (hem, were upon tneir feet and bending forward, 
Then Delaney opened his arms, and Alice threw herself upon his 
bosom with a quick, wild gesture! Thus, for the full space of a 
minute, they both stood—every one fully, as by a singular intuition, 
understanding the scene, One of the ministers here came forward 
and cently separated them. 

_ “No, no,” said Delaney, “ you must not, you cannot take her 
away from me!” 

Heaven forbid that I should do that!” replied the minister. 
‘» But by your own confession she is not your wife.”’ 

‘No, she is not!” returned Delaney, mournfully. 

“ But she is ready to take up her vows again,” said Alice, smi- 
‘ling through the tears that now rained over her face. 

Before that Jarge assemblage, all standing, and with few dry 
eyes, was pronounced, in e broken voice, the marriage ceremony 
that gave Delaney and Alice to each other. As the minister, an 
“aged 1 man, with thin white locks, finished the rite, he laid his” 
_ hands upon the heads of the two be had joined in holy bonds, and 
lifting up his aged eyes, that streamed with drops of cladness, he 

said, in a solemn voice, 
‘What God has joined together, let not Rum put asunder!” 


22 


« Amen!” shouted the whole assembly, with one spontaneous 
voice. The re-union was accomplished. 

The meeting then adjourned, and many a warm haunt of the 
hand and heart felt congratulation did the redeemed one and his 
ever faithful wife receive from the multitude that now crowded 
around them on every side. Delaney now left the church in com- 
pany with his smiling and happy bride, and proceeded.to the 
home of her friends, by whom, it is needless to say, they were 
received with open arms and willing hearts.. And what added 
still more to Delaney’s felicity was, that his children, from whom 
he had been so long estranged by the evil influence of rum, were 
now restored to his paternal care and keeping. He is once more a 
happy husband and father; and may that Almighty Hand, which 
has snatched him from destruction still be his guide and protector, 
that he may be enabled to hold fast to his integrity, and be pre- 
served from future temptation. 





What o'clock is it? H, 


When T was a young lad, my father one day called. me to him, 
that he might teach me to know what o’clock it was. He told me 
the use of the minute finger, and the hour hand, and deseribed to — 
me the figures on the dial plate, until I was pretty perfect in my 
part. 

No sooner was I complete master of this additional knowledge, A 
than I set off scampering to join my. companions at a game “of 
marbles; but my father called me. back again. PROP s Hum- ' 
phrey,” said he, “I have something more to tell you.’ 

Back again I went, wondering what else I had got to learn ; : 
i | thought I knew all about the clock, and quite as well as Puy 
father did. 

‘‘ Humphrey,” said he, ‘‘ I have taught you to know the. ie 
of day. I mnst now teech you howto find out the ti me of your life.” 

“All this was strange to me, so I waited rather impatiently to 
hear how my father would explain it, for I wanted sadly to go to 
ny marbles. 

‘The Bible,” says he, ‘describes the years of man to be three- 
score and ten, or four-score years. Now, life is very uncertain, — 
and you may not live a day longer; but if we divide the four-score | 
years of a man’s life into twelve parts, like the dial of a.clock, it 
will allow almost seven years for every figure. When a boy i Oe 
seven years old. then it is one o’clock of his life, and this is the case” 
with you. When you arrive at’ fourteen years, . it will be two 
o’clock with you ; and when at twenty-one years, it will be three. 
o’clock, should it please God thus long to spare your life. In this 


Se 


\ 


manner you may thus know the time of your life, and looking at the 
clock may perhaps remind youofit. | My great-grandfather, ac- 
cording to his calculation, died at 12 o'clock ; my grand-father at 
eleven, aud my fatheratten, At what hour you and [ shall die, 
Humphrey, is only known to Him to whom all things are known.’’ 

Never since then have I heard the inquiry, ‘*‘ What o'clock is 
it?” nor do I think that J have ever looked at the face of the clock 
without being reminded of the words of my father, 





4 Jucerer Joeerep.—A juggler in Boston, after performing seve- 
ral feats of legerdemain, asked any of the company to favor him with 
a nine-penny piece, and he would convert it into a dollar. A spectator 
out with his leather pouch, and handed the exhibitor a ninepence, which 
the latter readily apparently changed into a silver dollar, handing it to 
the spectator to examine. ‘The countryman on receiving the dollar, 
took off his hat, and made a low bow to the exhibitor, exclaiming, “Well, 
PU be darned if you hain’t done it!” and putting the dollar into the 
pouch from which he had taken the nine pence, he added, “ but you 
hain’t. going to turn it back into nine-pence, ‘no how |” 





Ways ano Means.—Two Irishmen who were travelling together, 
got out of money, and being in want of a drink of whiskey, devised the 


following ways and means:—Patrick catching a frog out of a brook, 


Part 


went forward, and the alee he came to, asked the landjord what 
~ ereature that was. ‘“ ft Is 


‘frog,’ replied the landlord. ‘ No, sir,” 
said Pat, “itis a mouse.” “It is a frog,” repeated the landlord. ‘It 
is a mouse,” said Pat again, “ and lll leave it to the first traveller that 


~ eomes along, fora pint of whiskey.” “Agreed,” said the landlord. 


Murphy soon arrived, and to him was the appeal made. After much 
examination and deliberation, it was decided to bea mouse, and the 
landlord, in spite of the evidence of his senses, paidthe bet. 


Beuryo Havnp.—An idle fellow, complaining of his hard lot, said he 
was the last child his mother ever had, that he was born on the last 
day of the year, the last day of the month, the last day of the week, and 
be had always been behind-hand. He believed it would have been fifty 
dollars in his pocket if he had not been born at all. 


“ Don’t co any Hicuer.”--The late Judge Pease. of the Supreme 
Court of Ohio, was a noted wag. A young lawyer was once making his 
first effort before him, and had thrown himself on the wings of his ima- 
gination into the seventh heaven, and was preparing fora higher ascent, 
when the Judge struck his ruler on his desk, two or three times, and ex- 
claimed to the astonished orator,‘ Hold on, hold on, my dear sir !——don’t 
go any higher, for you are already out of the jurisdiction of this Court.” 





Love mm Trasrs.--When love assumes the shape of tears, beware !— 
Remember, it is the warmth of summer days that causes sbowers. 


24 
A Beautiful Imcidemt. 


~ On a beautiful summer’s day a clergyman was called to preach 
in a town in Indiana, to a young Episcopal congregation. At the 
close of the discourse, he addressed his youug hearers in such 
words as these : 

* Learn that the present life isa preparation for and has a ten- 
dency to eternity. ‘lhe present is linked to the future throughout 
creation, in the vegetable, in the animal, and in the moral world. 
As is the seed, so is the fruit; asis the egg, so is the fowl; as is 
the boy, so is the man ; and as is the rational being in this world, 
so will he be in the next; Dives estranged from God here, is Dives 
estranged from Him iferdafter: and Enoch walking with God here 
is Enoch walking with Godin a calm and better world. Go to the 
worm that you tread upon, and learn lessons of wisdom, The very 
caterpillar seeks the food that fosters it for another and similar 
state, and more wisely than man, builds its own sepulchre, from 
whence in time, by a kind of resurrection, it comes forth a new 
creature in almost an angelic form. Andnow, that which crawled, 
flies, and that which fed on comparatively gross food, sips the dew 
that revels in the rich pastures—an emblem of that paradise where 
flows the river of love, and grows the tree of life. Could the 
caterpillar have been diverted from its proper element and model 
of life—if it had never attained the butterfly’s splendid form and 
hue, it had perished a worthless worm: Consider her ways and 
be wise. Let it not be said that ye are more negligent than worms, 
and that your reason is less available than their instinct. As often © 
as the butterfly flits across your path, remember that it aT 
in its flight—‘ Live ror tHe Future!” 

With this the preacher closed his discourse ; but to deepen the 
the impression, a butterfly, directed by the Hand which guides 
alike the sun and an atom in their course, fluttered through the 
church, as if commissioned by Heaven to repeat the exhortation. 
There was “neither speech nor language,” but its voice was heard 
saying to the gazing audience—* Live for the Future.” 








Aw Evecant Exrracr— Here is an elezant extract from a Western 

paper :—-It is easy to see when a girl thinks “much of her beau ; ; for when- 

ever he approaches her she sorter leans up to him like a sick kitten toa 
hot brick. 





“ What do vou ask for your beef?” said a man toa Muley the ather 
day. “Six cents a pound,” was thereply. ‘Six cents! no, not I, 
faith,” said the man, “I’d rather go home and dive into my pork bar- 
rel.” “ And break your skull against the bottom,” said the butcher. 


An Irishman cautions the publie against trusting his wife Peggy on his’ ac. 
count, as he ts net married to her ! 


25 . 


An English gentleman was cemplaining bitterly once to an itinerant 
fisherman who occasionally supplied him with fish, that a lobster he had 
purchased of him the day before, was not “ quite fresh.” ‘* Vell, mas- 
ter,” cried the fisherman, ‘and whose fault’s that, [ vonders? I’ve 
cried him by your house every day fora fortnight. You might have 
bought him before, if you’re so wery petickler.” 


A Basurut Lover.—A bashful wooer, not long since, wishing to pop 
the question, did so in the following singular, manner. ‘Taking up the 
young lady’scat, he said—-* Pussy, may | have your mistress?” It was 
answered by the lady, who said——" Say yes, pussy.” 


Turis anp Roses.—The following is a pretty and withal a very plea- 
sant Epigram :— 
My Mary, from the lattic’d grove, © 
Brought me a sweet boquet of posies, 
And asked, as round my neck she clung, 
If tulips I preferred to roses? ie 
* [ cannot tell, sweet wife,” I sighed, 4 
* But kiss me, ere I see the posies,” 
She did—* Oh, | prefer,” I cried, 
“ Thy two-irs to a dozen roses !”? 





‘« This here feller”, said a witness in court the other day, ‘‘broke our 
winder. with a tater, and hit our Isabellar on the elber, as she was playing on 
the pianer.” 

_The magistrate said—‘‘ The conduct of the prisonah, and his general cha- 
ractah, rendah it propah that he should be no longah a membah of societah.” 





‘Sweets or Liserry.—An [{rishman escaped from a prison by 
jumping out of awindow. He came down upon the head of a 
molasses hogshead, which broke and let him in up to the middle. 
“ Faith,’’ said he, as he ‘scrambled out, ‘I have often heard of 
the sweets of liberty, but never knew what it meant before.” 

Fortitupe.—At the siege of Yorktown, two colored men were 
placed as sentinels together. When the relief came, the corporal 
found both in the same position he hadleft them. On demanding 
of the one sitting why he did not rise, he answered,—* I believe, 
Massa, I’se wounded, and I: guess Cuffee dead; hant spoke dis 
good while.” On examination, Cuffee was really dead, and Sam- 
bo had the bones of his arm and leg so badly fractured as to ren- 
der amputation absolutely necessary. When the poor fellow was 
informed of it he replied,—“ Well, Massa, take um off.” After 
the operation was performed, the surgeons began to condole with 

‘him upon his misfortune, when he exclaimed,—‘‘ Never mind, 
‘Massa, tank God, I got noder leg and noder arm for um yet.” 


AGRICULTURAL, &e.. 





Tus Farmer’s Occupation.—Agriculture is an employment institu- 
ted by God Himself, and by Him peculiarly owned and blest. It is that 
on which every thing else depends. ‘True, itis laborious; but then the 
labor brings health, and health is the foundation of enjoymentand hap- 
piness. he condition of the farmer is the condition of independence. 
His little domain is his own, his. comforts are his own, and: he is not at. 
the mercy of public whim and caprice. If the income of the farmer be 
notas abuadant as.that of the professional man or the merchant, it is 
also not so precarious. If greater bodily exertion and fatigue attaches. 
_ to his employment, he has far less anxiety and perplexity of mind. If 
he has not an equal access to the luxuries and superfluities of life, he is — 
more certain of necessaries and comforts. Inevery civilized country the 
industrious farmer is respected ; but in none have they enjoyed so many 
advantages asin our.own. Here the man who cultivates the soi), and 
adheres attentively to his employment, acquires a fortune, and the confi- 
dence of his fellow citizens ; andif he possesses that strong and vigorous 
mind for which our countrymen are remarkable, honors await him in our 
national and Jegislative councils. ‘The intelligent farmer, therefore, 
need not consider himself as plodding in an humble sphere; as devoted 
to an occupation, useful indeed, as supplying the physical wants of man, 
but disconnected with the exercise of his iutellectual powers. His false 
shame and indifference to labor, fly before the conviction that he ranks in 
society with all that is useful, honorable and dignified. . 

Ye tillers of the soil! ye that thus earn your bread by the sweat of the 
brow! ancient and honorable people! lords of the soil and sovereigns 
of this lower creation, may the earth still continue to yield to you her in- 
crease, and peace and plenty pervade your dwellings. Ya . 





Buckwheat without Grit. 


yeahs 


son affords a good crop of itself- Thus, the buckwheat is protect= 
ed, and two crops obtained from’a single seeding. 


27 
DRAINING. 


“ Draining is the art of removing superabundant moisture from the sur* 


face of the earth, and is often indispensable in the cultivation and i improve. 


ment of the soil.”—Burter. 


By the ‘surface of the earth,” as herein applied, we are to un- 
derstand the entire arable strata, consisting of both soil and sub- 
‘soil. The object of drainage, then, is to remove from this strata 
vall water found in excess, or in other words, all beyond the quan- 
tity required to saturate the earthy particles. This is better un- 
derstood by observing that these particles separately considered, 
aoa iG power to absorb a greater or less quantity of water, and 







th big’ o hey have absorbed as much as they are capable of 
doi doing, they are then said to be saturated. When these particles 
ia d, or collecte “hgh to form Jand, there exists 


between them 10re or Jes This space, if the land he 
‘dry, remains open, and the’same thing holds good when the earthy 
particles a aresimply saturated ; byt when the land becomes charged 
with superabundant moisture, then the former space becomes 
filled with the water, said to be mm excess. 
_ By drainage, we remove the water from between the particles, 
but leave them in a state of saturation; still there isa more im- 
portant change wrought jn the land—a change not so much re- 
garded as it ‘should be. Observe, that water canvot run out un- 
less air runsin. By drainage, then, you change the land from 
a state wherein it must be, in a great measure, governed by the 
action of heat and moisture, to ane wherein heat, ‘air and moisture 
is the conjoint acting power. The former is the power of fer- 
mentation ; the latter, the power of simple decay, or slow com- 
bustion. | ‘Thus, then, even the philosophy of drainage points out 
the error of always “attributing the decomposition of manures in 
‘the soil to the action of fermentation, or of considering this last 
-power asessential tothe growth of plants. 


A Ss 


Mr wMealicng ort Potato EKlour. 


Se taions which are unsound may be converted into starch, and 
thas saved from totat loss. In England and Ireland, where itheira- 
-vages” of. the potato disease have been seriously injurious, it has 
been attempted to preserve the valuable properties of the root by 
“extracting the farina of flour, by various processes. It is convert- 
“ed into ‘* British Arrow Root,” which is nothing more than starch 
in anice form. The Farmer’s Magazine gives the following as 
the most perfect. process of obtaining the flour: : 
1. Thoroughly wash the potatoes. 
2. Peel away the skin without cutting off much, 


ae Grate the meted potatoes finely into a pulp, 


28 


4. Place the pulp on a hair sieve, pour water over it, stirring it 
about well, till the water ceases to pass with a milky appearance. 

5. The pulp left on the sieve may be thrown away, [or given to 
animals] and the milky water set aside to settle. _ - 
6. When the particles of starch have all settled, the water should 
be poured off, and fresh water added ; the whole stirred up presh 

and allowed to settle again. 

7. These washings may be repeated four or five times, Sion 
the starch will have assumed the character of arrow-root, and will 
have become white as snow, while the water will now be bpeiettly 
clear. 

8. The prepared flour must be thoroughly dried, whe 
kept for any length of time in jatstor casks. y be 

The flour or starch may be dri being spread ona cloth and 
laid on a board inthe sun, or it maybe dried in shallow vessels ina 
warm room ; or it may be dried in stoves or ovens. ye Es in 
the manner described, the flour may not only be used as starch, 
but may be used with wheat flour for making bread, tiedeha te &c. 
It is also used as arrow-root, and is a delicate food for weak di- 
gestions, for children, and for the sick, 





From the New York Tribune. 
Milk Souring in Thunder Storms. 


We have heard great complaints from dairy women about their milk 
getting sour during a thunder storm, although perfectly sweet a short 
time previous. ‘The following plans will prevent this ina great degree. 
All the pans cgntaining the milk ought to be placed on non-conductors of 
electricity, such as blocks of baked wood, pieces of glass, or wood that 
has been well painted or varnished. ‘These are articles most easily pro- 
vided. Bees-wax, feathers, and woolen cloth are also non-conductors, 
but inconvenient to be used. All these articles will insulate the pans and 
prevent the electric fluid from entering, which is the cause of acidity it- 
self. We think we have clearly shown this to be the case ina pampblet 
that we published some time ago. If glass basins were to be substituted 
for tin pans, the plan would be better ‘still, and there would then be no 
necessity forthe practice suggested above; the glass would preserve the 
milk much longer sweet than pans, and ‘the acid would have no effect 
upon it. We are not aware of any acid that has the least impression on 
glass, except the fluoric acid. All iron vessels, or vessels compounded of 
iron, as tin pans are, attract the heat very readily, and of course sour 
othe milk; and such is the affinity of iron for an acid that we doubt much 
“ifit is ever washed out entirely. Iron vessels, we are confident, are the 
very worst vessels that could be used for the purpose. They are even 
inferior to wood. JAMES GLENN. 





\ Pressing ground in which onion or other light seeds are planted, ‘With a 
roller or beard, adds greatly to insure their growth, and increase the crop. 


RECEIPTS; & cc. 


Bs. THE sTucco WHITEWASH, 
Take helf a bushel of nice, unslacked lime, slack it with boiling water, 
‘Covering it during the process to keep in the steam. Strain the liquor through 
a fine sieve or strainer, and add to it a peck of fine salt, previously well 
, dissolved in warm water; three pounds of ground rice, ground to a thin 
paste, and stirred and boiled hot; half a pound of powdered Spanish whi- | 
ting, and.a pound of clean glue, which has been previously dissolved by first 
soaking it well, and then hanging it over a slow fire, in asmall kettle, within 
a large one filled with water. Add five gallons of water to the whole mix- 
ture, stir it well and let it stand a few days covered from the dirt. It should 
be put on quite hot, and for this purpose it can be-kept in a kettle on a port- 
ablefurnace. | 
_ Where colors are desired, Spanish-brown stirred in will make a red or 
pink, more or less deep according to quantity. Finely pulverized common 
clay, well mixed with Spanish-brown, before it is stirred into the mixture, 
makes it alilac color, Lamp-black and Spanish-brown mixed together pro- 
duces a reddish stone color. Lamp-black in moderate quantities makes a 
‘slate color, very suitable for the outside of buildings. Yellow ochre stirred 
in makes a yellow wash, but chrome goes farther, and makes a color gene. 
‘tally esteemed prettier. 





_ Farep Ham, wir Tomators.—Fry some slices of cold boiled ham.— 
Then fry some tomatoes, allowing one tomato to each slice of meat. Lay 


the tomatoes on the ham, shake some pepper over them, and then send 
them to the table. 





Veau Curirts.__Make a seasoning of grated bread, minced ham, chopped 
parsely, salt, pepper, and chopped mushrooms, if you have them. Mix with 
it some yolkiof egg. Cut the veal into small thin slices, rub them all over 
with lard, and then spread the seasoning over both sides. Wrap up each 
cutlet carefully in white paper, oiled and buttered. Bake them slowly for 
three-quarters of an hour, and serve them up in the papers. 





Catves’ Liver, Friep.——Cut the liver into thin slices, and put them into 
a frying-pan witha piece of butter, rolled in flour, some minced onions and 


a glass of white wine, sult, pepper, and a little mace. Let it fry about 
ten minutes. 





_ Catves’ Liven Baxep.—Lard the liver with bacon, and let it lie three or 
four hoursin a covered tureen, with a seasoning of parsley, shalots, Jaurel 
and thyme chopped fine, a little pepper and salt, and two table-spoons full 
of sweet oil. Turn it several times. Then wrap it up in thin slices of ba- 
_ con or cold ham, and bake or roast it about an hour anda quarter. Add to 
me aed the yolk of an egg, and some minced onions and chopped sweet 
herbs. yi 


id 





Lozster Savce—The lobster being boiled, extract the meat from the 
shell, and beat itin a mortar. Rub it through a cullender or sieve, and put 
into a sauce-pan with a spoon-full of veloute (or velvet essence) if you have 
it, and one of broth. Mix.it well, and add a piece of butter, some salt, and 


some Cayenne pepper, Stew it ten minutes, and serve it up, to eat with 
‘boiled fresh fish. 


30 


Pea Sour.—Take two quarts of dried, split peas, the evening before you 
intend making the soup, and putting them into loke-warm water, let them 
soak all night. Inthe morning, put the peas into a pan or pot, with three 
quarts of cold water, a pound of bacon, and a pound of the lean of fresh 
beef. Cut up two carrots, two onions, and two heads of celery, and put 
them into the soup, with a bunch of sweet herbs, and three or four cloves. 
Boil it slowly five or six hours, till the peas can no longer be distinguished, 
having lost all shape and form; then strain it, and serve it up. 


To Know Goop Fiour.-When flour is genuine, or of the best kind, it 
holds together in a mass when squeezed by the hand, and shows the im- 
pression of the fingers, and even of the marks of the skin, much longer 
than when it is bad or adulterated; and the dough made with it is very 
gluey, ductile, and elastic, easy to be kneaded, and which may be elongated, 
flattened, and drawn in every direction, without breaking. 


A Nove. Picxie.--The farmers’ dames in Hampshire, England, and per- 
haps in other countries, when eggs are too plentiful for profitable sale in 
the neighboring markets, adopt the following plan of preserving them, and 
the condimentyis very relishing. ‘lake from four to six dozen of eggs, newly 
laid, boil them tolerably hard, divest them of the shells, place them in large - 
mouthed, earthen jars, and pour upon therm scalding vinegar, well seasoned 
with whole pepper, alspice, ginger, and, for those who like the flavor, a few 
cloves or garlic. When the pickle is cold, stop the jars quite close, and the 
eggs will be fit for use in a month. 





For a Sors TuHroat,—-Mix a penny’s worth of pounded camphor with a 
wine-glass of brandy. Poura small quantity on a lump of sugar, and allow 
it to dissolve in the routh every hour. ‘The third or fourth time enables the 
patient to swallow with ease. This has cured in the last stages of the disease. 


Tries GirpLtep By Mice or Rassits.--These may be saved hy taking in 
the spring of the year, a piece of bark off from any limb, and putting on 
where the bafk is gnawed off--using care tu fit it nicely at the ends——and 
then covering it ali over with grafting clay. It is not material that the 
bark so put on should extend entirely around the tree. If a channel is 
formed for the flow of the sap, the tree will be saved. 


Gariic Burrer.——Take two large cloves of garlic and pound them to.a 
paste in a mortar, adding by degrees, a piece of butter the size of an egg. 
You may with a liftle of this butter give the taste of garlic to sauces. Some 
persons like a piece of garlic butter on the table, to eat with roast meat. 





Srrawsery Leaves —Three or four eaten green, are an immediate remedy 
for Dysentery, Summer Complaint, &c. Editors by publishing the above, 
will confer a favor on the community, and save an immense amount of suf- 
fering and many valuable lives. 

The green leaves of the Benne Plant, which can be had at any of the flo- 
rists and gardeners in the city or the suburbs, are an unfailing remedy in 
these complaints, either for infants or adults. These leaves possess the sin- 
gular property of dissolving in cold water in a few minutes, forming an 
agreeable beverage which speedily allays all irritation, and restores the sys- 
tem to a healthy tone. ‘Two leaves, fresh from the garden, will make about 
half a pint of liquor, and forty leaves can be had for five or ten cents. The 
plant is so very rare, and its extraordinary virtueg so little known, that there 

ze few places out of the city whcre-at can be obtained.— New York Sun. 


31 


RATES OF POSTAGE. 


On Leiters.—Single letters, or any number of pieces not 
exceeding half an ounce, 300 miles or less’ - 5 cts. 
paver S00 mitles, ce. lee om Sem dO 
Drop letters (not mailed) ; } - - Lie 


For each additional half ounce or ee. thereof, add sin- 
gle postage thereto, 


On Newspapers.— Newspapers of 1900 square inches or less, 
sent by editors or publishers, from their offices of 
publication, any distance not exceeding thirty miles, Free. 
Over 30 miles and not exceeding 100 miles, - - 1 ct. 
Over 100 and out of the State, - > ~ - Hy“ 
All sizes over 1900 square inches, postage same as 
pamphlets. 
On Pamphlets, 5-c.—Pamphlets, magazines and periodicals, 
any distance, for one ounce or lesa, each copy, - , 
E¥Each additional ounce or tractional part thereof - 1 
On Circulars.—Quarto post, single cap or paper not larger 
than single cap, folded, directed and unsealed, Tor 
every sheet, - - - - . 7" 4, 


1 
2 


LIST OF POST OFFICES. 


The following is alist of the Post Offices within 30 miles of the 
city of Newark, to which newspapers may be sent by mail to 


subscriber's free of postage: 
New Jersey. New York. 



































. ———- re ax. canoe Wal career RR 
Elizabethtown, | Chatham, Little Falls, New York city, 
Rahway, , Morristown, Pompton, West Farms, 
Westfield, } Suckasunna, Hackensack, | Brooklyn, L. I. 
Amboy, © ; Whippany, | Jersey City, | Jamaica, 

South River, | Bloomfield, Hoboken,, Newtown, © 
New Brunswick | Pine Brook, Summit, College Point, 
Six Mile Run, | Basking Ridge! Madison, Harlem, 

New Market, | Rockaway, Mendham, New Rochelle, 
Orange, Dover, Hanover, Flatbush, L. 1. 
South Orange, | Belleville, Boonton, Williamsburg, 
Camptown, Acquackanonk | Caldwell, Tompkineville, 
Springfield, Paterson, Parsippany. _| Flushing, [S. I. 

Port. Richmond 











182 


. 


Courts in ihe State of Wew Jersey. 


Under the law passed at the recent session of the Legislature, 
the terms of holding the Circuit and other County Courts have 
been materially changed, and we publish the following ‘table, 
compiled from the act, “of the ternis as they are to be held here- 
after on the following Tuesdays: & 

First District—-Cuter Justice Henry W. Green, Prosiding eee 


Bergen, — 1 Feb. 1 May. 1 Aug. - “1 Nov. 
Hudson, ee gal . Gh epravec 
Essex, 4 % AN or Ai tha” Ce Biter 
Second District—James S. Nevaus, Presiding Judge: rar 
Monmouth, 1 Feb. 1 May. 1 Aug. 1 Nov. 
Somerset, 3.“ < re heave °° ay 
Middlesex, : a ys SN ie i ey 
Warren, 1 Mar. 1 June. 1Sep. 1 Dec 
Third District—Ina C. Wurreneap, Presiding Judge: 
Sussex, 1 Feb. 1 May. 1 Aug, | 1 Nov. 
Morris, pa ped Buss 3 epi 
Passaic, | 1 March. 1 June. 1 Sep. * t Dee.’ 
Fourth District—Josrrn F. Ranpoirn, Presiding Judge: ~ * " 
Hunterdon, 2 Feb. 2 May. 2Aug. 2 Nov. 
Burlington, 3.‘ Jo ii . 3° et 
Mercer, | 1 March. T June. b Sép. pik. Pd Dec. 
Fifth District—Tuomas P, Carpenter, Presiding Judge: | 
Camden, 1'Feb, 1 May. 1Aug. 1Novw 
Cumberl’d, 2° * QaXe Qi Shee air 
Salem, Qo e , 3 PASS, 8 6 
Gloucester, 4 ‘ 4 .* A alia 
Atlantic, 1 Mar.* 2 June. 2. Sep. e 2 Dec. 
Cape May, 2 ‘ Py. 1 Aug. Wik 


*Inferior Court of Common Pleas, Court of is General Quarter 
Sessions of the Peace, and Orphans’ Court, only. . a ay ( 
The following Courts hold their regular terms at T renton. Aes 
District Court of the U. S.-_Second Tuesdays of March, 
May, September and November. . : 
Courr of Erxrros AND APPEALS, in the ast a 
“Tuesdays of April, July, October and January. 
Supreme Courr.—First Tuesdays of January, April. J dy ahd 


Th iw 
tht, yes 


October. 
Court or Caan cceRY.——Third Tee of March}: J une, Sep- 


tember and December. 
i 


i 


Jo 


Courts in the State of WVew-York. 

The Court for the trial of Impeachment and the Correction 
of Errors, may be held at any time during the sitting of the Le- 
gislature, on such days, and at such places, as they shall from 
time to time appoint. 

The stated terms of the Court of Chancery, are on the fourth 
Mondays of May and October, in the city of New-York ; and on 
the fourth Mondays of January and August, at the city of Albany. 

The stated terms of the Vice-Chancellor, in the citv of News 
York, are on the first Mondays of Jan, April, July and October, 

Supreme Court is held at the city of New-York, the Ist Mon 
day in May. At the city of Utica, the 1st Monday of July. At 
the city of. Albany, the Ist Monday in January. At the city of 
Rochester the 3d Monday in October. 


COURTS OF COMMON PLEAS.’ 
and General Sessions for the Counties of New York State. 
33 When the month is printed in italics, the Common Pleas is only 
held in that term. 

Albany.—Second Tuesday in. June and December, and 3d. 
do. in March, and September. 

Allegany.—Firsi Monday in February, June and October. 

Broome.—First Monday in February, June and October. 

Cattaraugus.—Last Tuesday in February, and 1st do. in 
June and October. 

Cayuga.—Third Monday in January, May and September. ' 

Chatauque.—Second Tuesday in February and October, and 
4th do. in June. 

Chemung.—Second Tuesday in January, April, July and 
October. | 

Chenango.—Second Monday in February, June and October. 

Clinton.—First Monday in January and October and 2d do. in 


May. | 
Columbia.—T hird Monday in February and June and do. 4th 


in September. 
Cortland.—Second Tuesday in February, April and Septem. 


Delaware.—Fourth Monday in February, third do. in June, and 
24 do. in September and December. 

Dutchess.—First Monday in February and June and Jast do. 
in September. 

Erie —First Monday in March, June anJ October, and 2d do. 
ia August and November. 


34 


Essez.—Second Tuesday in January and gAPrils and last 
do. in September. 
Franklin.—Last,'Tuesday in April and 2d an in October. 
Fulton.—Third Monday in January and ASt do. in April, 
August and October. 
Genesee.—First Tuesday in February and 2d Tuesday in June 


7 and October. 


Greene.—Second Monday in February, last dé. in May and 
Ist do. in September. 

ffamilton-—Third Tuesday in June and December. 

Herkimer.—¥ ivst Monday in February, June and October. 

Jefferson.—Last Monday in February and May and Ist do. in 
Septernber and December. 

Kings.—Third Tuesday in January, July and October, — 

Lewis.—First Tuesday in January and 3d do. in April} and 
September. 

Livingston. Last Monday in January, | May and Se steehbert 

Madison.—First Monday in February and October and 3d do. 
in June, 

Munroe.—Second Monday in March and Tue, and 1st do. in 
October and December. 

Montgomery.—Second Monday in March, J une, September and 
December. 

Niagara.—First Monday in Iebruary, June and September. 

Oneida —Second Monday 1 in February, March, June, Septem- 
ber and December, 

Onondaga.—Yourth Monday in February, May, August and 
November. 
~ Ontario —Third Tuesday in February, May, August and 
November. — 

Orange.—Second Monday in February, last do. in May, and 
first do. in September and December, 

Orleans.—Third Monday i in January, June | ane if, lace yi 4 

Oswego.— First Monday in February, 3d io) in June and 2d 4 
in October. 

Otsego.—First Monday in February, 3d abut in June and 2ddo, 
in October. 

Puinam.— First Tuesday i in February and 2d do. in ‘September. 

Queens. —Third Tuesday in February, Ist do. in Juae and last 
do. in: October. 

Rensselaer.—Last Monday in Jawuary, May A September, 


 Richmond.—Second Tuesday in April, Sept. and December. 


Rockland.—First Tuesday in Febangey, 3d do in April and 
November, oem ie 


St: Lawrence.—Third Monday i in May, Sepitinber ata Dab. 


JO 


suai. —Second Tuesday in April and July and last do. in 
August and December. 

Schenectady. —Third Tuesday in January, last do.’ in April 
and 2d do. in October: 

Schoharie.—First Monday i in February, June and October. 

Seneca.---Lirst T veruey in February and October, and 2d do. 
in, May. 

"Steuben.—First Monday j in March, June, Sept.and December. 

Suffolk.—Virst Tuesday in January and October and last do. 
in May. 

Sullivan. ---Last Tuesday in ‘J anuary, 2d do. in June and Oct. 

Tioga.---First Monday in ebruary, June and October. 

Tompkins. ---Fourth Monday i in January and September and 
3d do. in May. 

Ulster. .--Second Monday in Mar ch, June, Re ionder and Dec. 

Warren.---Second 'Tuesday in February and June, 3d do. in 
Abel and last do. in September. 

Washington ---Second Tuesday in March, last do. in May 
and August and Ist do. in December. 

Wayne. ---Fourth Tuesday in January, May and September. 

Westchester.---Fourth Mepdsy.} in May and September and Ist 
do. in December. 

Wyomin ae Monday i in June and 3d de. in October and 
February. © 

Yates. Seednd Monday in Eehauars and November and 4th 
do. in May and August. 





The Court of Common Pleas for the city and county of New 
York sits every month, commencing on the third Monday, and 
continues four weeks. 


} Superior Court of the city of New-York, is held on the first 
Monday of each month of the year. 


Court of Oyer and Terminer for the city and county of New 
York, is held at the City Hall, on the third Monday in March, 
first Monday in May, first Monday i in Juty, 4th Monday in Sep- 
tember, and fourth Monday in December. Courts of Oyer and 
Terminer are held simultaneously with the Circuit Cour}s in the 
several counties throughout the State. 


The Court of General Sessions for the city and county of 
New-York, is held on the Ist Monday of each month, 


The Marine Court in the city of New-York, sits every day in 
the year, Sundays, Christmas, New Year’s day, and the Fourth 
of July excepted. 

on ey Oy es @ ne 
eS 


ws We 





LRBBSAD, KRBSOLS 
| AND 


rANCY LACE GOODS 


STORE, . 


OPPOSITE WILSON’S TIN STORE, 
MAIN STREET, 


PERTH AMBOY, N. J- 





TAMBS ALLBN, 


Keeps constantly on hand a large assortment of Fancy Goods, 
consisting of Edgings, Cap and Cape Stuffs, Hat and Cap Ribbon, 
Ladies’ Dress Caps, Infant’s, do., Needle-work and Dimity Col- 
lars, Hat Tabs, Plain and Figured. 

MUSLINS... Bleached and Unbleached, Cross-bar and Fancy 
Muslins, also, Red, Yellow and Canton Flannel, Handkerchiets 





of Silk, Linenand Cotton, Tableconaly Linen and Cotton, Cot-. 


ton- batts and Wadding, Woolen and~ 
Zephyr worsted, dec, “&e. 






otton Yarn | fo knitting, 


HOSIERY. A Good Assortment, comprising | Cotton and 


Woolen, Black, White, Slate Color and Blue Mixed. Cassimere 
and Alpaca, with a Great Variety of Children’s Socks and Stock- 
ings. 

GLOVESu. Kid, Buck-skin, Wool, Silk aed aan Thread 
Mitts and Mittens, Bows, Bowetts, Shineal Comforters, Woolen 
Caps, Shawls, &c., &c., Ke. | 


BUTTONS, for Ri frts and Bosoms, Pantaloons, Vests, also, y 


Children’s Glass, Steel, Gilt, and Jet Elastic. 
COMBS, Brushes, Soissoes, Razors, Pen and Pooket Knives, 
Silver, German Silver and Wood Pencils. 


PINS, Emmans § Baily’s Best Needles, Breast-Pins, Shawl 


and Diaper Pins, &c., &c. 

STEEL, GLASS and GOLD BEADS, Silk and Cotton Purses, 
and Suspenders of ten different kinds. Ea 

A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF PERFUMERY. 


MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, such as Accagepons and Vin 


Also, Bows, Bridges, Strings, &c. 


A Great Variety of Ladies’ and Childrens s SHOES, and nu- 
_ merous other articles, for sale at very low prices Sor CASH. 


; 


